COMMENT - As another 2 million viewers abandon the BBC it's vital the licence fee is abolished and the corporation refocuses its efforts on original quality TV

After nearly two million people told the BBC they no longer required a licence fee last year due to the growth in streaming services and the ruinous £159 cost of the licence, it is vital the corporation undergoes radical change.
Watch more of our videos on Shots! 
and live on Freeview channel 276
Visit Shots! now

According to TV Licensing’s annual report, 1.96 million households said they did not watch the BBC or other live television in 2021-22 and the corporation believes even more will desert them this year.

If the BBC is to survive, it is vital that the licence fee is abolished, that a new voluntary funding model is created, and the corporation focuses its efforts on producing quality, original TV that it can sell around the world. In a cost of living crisis, the status quo is not only unacceptable it is totally unsustainable.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

As research by this website and its sister titles across the UK demonstrates, more and more of the television output of the BBC is dominated by repeats –especially outside prime time on BBC1.

The BBC headquarters building in Portland Place, London. Picture: stock.adobe.comThe BBC headquarters building in Portland Place, London. Picture: stock.adobe.com
The BBC headquarters building in Portland Place, London. Picture: stock.adobe.com

A snapshot of a week’s scheduling across the corporation’s four TV channels in late June found most programmes on BBC Two, BBC Three and BBC Four were repeats with little new for viewers to watch.

Our analysis reveals 52 per cent of airtime on BBC Two in the week ending June 24 was spent broadcasting re-runs. This rose to 85 per cent and 87 per cent on BBC Three and BBC Four respectively.

The BBC was once synonymous with quality, originality and world-beating television – reaching a peak in the 1970s and early 1980s when nearly half the British population would tune in to its top rated shows.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

But the guarantee of a criminally enforceable tax to fund it, known as the licence fee, has given it a complacency which has allowed it to spread itself too thinly at a time when consumer choice from other providers has never been greater. It is a lethal combination.

It has too many TV channels, radio channels and websites and has never had to justify anything to the punters who must pay for it. They have absolutely no choice in the matter – if they want live TV from any provider they still have to cough up for the licence fee. It’s like telling every Guardian newspaper reader they must first buy a copy of the Daily Mail – and vice versa.

What worked well half a century ago is a model that is no longer fit for purpose. There has never been a bigger choice of viewing – everything from YouTube to Netflix and Prime – and a younger audience is increasingly turning its back on Auntie, as the corporation was once affectionately known.

It’s true, the network still has some big hitters – not least, its natural history programmes from the Father of the Nation David Attenborough.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

But its superb satirical comedy W1A rather nailed the problem. It is now so consumed with navel gazing and big corporate nonsense that it has rather forgotten what it is and who it serves.

A survey conducted by our titles last year revealed an overwhelming majority of the public were opposed to the compulsory TV licence fee. The survey, which ran from 25 May to 2 June, 2021, across 150 National World news titles in the UK, attracted 16,497 responses.

When asked if the BBC licence fee should remain compulsory, 95% of respondents answered “no” with 5% answering “yes”.

Respondents also favoured an “opt-in” service when this additional question was put to them, with 61% backing a system where you would only pay for the BBC services you consume, compared to 32% who were opposed to this, while 7% were unsure.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

On the question of whether the BBC represented good value for money, 93% of respondents answered “no”, compared to 5% who believed it did, and 2% who were unsure.

As the number of repeats grows and the younger generation in particular looks for visual entertainment elsewhere the issue will become more acute.

We are facing tough economic times. They will not pass quickly. The public must be liberated from an annual £159 tax for a service which is increasingly seen as very poor value for money.

The BBC defends itself and is rightly proud of its output that remains original.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

As a critical friends who remembers with nothing but affection the glory days of the Beep I want it to survive and flourish.

For it to achieve that, it needs a completely new funding model where it is free to compete against the likes of the commercial streaming services and it must radically redefine and consolidate its offering – its focus should be two TV channels packed with original programming, key national radio, and its terrific local radio stations which continue to do a great job despite tough financial pressures.

Beyond that, it should only build stand alone services where it can compete with other commercial players and do so with them on a level playing field –rather than requiring taxpayer subsidy.

Politicians frequently attack the BBC for political bias. I do not share that view. The BBC is a great institution – but it will not survive for much longer in its current form.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

The licence fee must go, new subscription and pay as you watch subscription services developed, many of its platforms dispensed with, and it must be given the freedom to focus on new and innovative ways to provide quality programming which will once again be the envy of the world.

How the licence fee works: Currently, anyone who wants to watch live TV, regardless of whether they consume BBC services, must pay £159 for a standard colour TV licence and £53.50 for a black and white licence.

If your household does not have a TV licence and you watch or record programmes as they’re being broadcast on TV, or watch any programmes on iPlayer, then you are breaking the law.